On Fair Selection in the Presence of Implicit Variance
Vitalii Emelianov, Nicolas Gast, Krishna P. Gummadi, Patrick, Loiseau

TL;DR
This paper investigates how fairness mechanisms like the Rooney rule can improve selection utility by accounting for implicit variance in candidate quality estimates, even without implicit bias.
Contribution
It introduces a model showing that fairness rules can enhance utility by addressing group-dependent variance in candidate quality estimates.
Findings
Demographic parity always increases selection utility.
Any gamma-rule weakly increases utility.
Fairness mechanisms outperform group-oblivious selection in the model.
Abstract
Quota-based fairness mechanisms like the so-called Rooney rule or four-fifths rule are used in selection problems such as hiring or college admission to reduce inequalities based on sensitive demographic attributes. These mechanisms are often viewed as introducing a trade-off between selection fairness and utility. In recent work, however, Kleinberg and Raghavan showed that, in the presence of implicit bias in estimating candidates' quality, the Rooney rule can increase the utility of the selection process. We argue that even in the absence of implicit bias, the estimates of candidates' quality from different groups may differ in another fundamental way, namely, in their variance. We term this phenomenon implicit variance and we ask: can fairness mechanisms be beneficial to the utility of a selection process in the presence of implicit variance (even in the absence of implicit bias)?…
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